Gottfried Wilhelm, Baron von Leibniz

German Philosopher and Mathematician

1646-1716

Leibniz' career as a scholar embraced the physical sciences, law, history, diplomacy,
and logic, and he held diplomatic posts (from 1666) under various German princes.
Leibniz also invented the Calculus shortly before Netwon but his work was published after.
His philosophical writings, including Theodicy (1710) and Monadology
(1714), popularized by the philosopher Christian von Wolff, were orthodox and
optimistic, claiming that a divine plan made this the best of all possible worlds.

According to Leibniz, the basic
constituents of the universe are simple substances he called monads, infinite in
number, nonmaterial, and hierarchically arranged. His major work, New Essays on
Human Understanding, a treatise on John Locke's Essay concerning Human
Understanding, was written in 1704 but because of Locke's death published only in
1765. A critique of Locke's theory that the mind is a blank at birth, it exerted
great influence on Kant and the German enlightenment. Modern studies have tended
to focus on Leibniz's contributions to mathematics and logic; manuscripts
published in the 20th cent. show him to be the founder of symbolic logic.